Pacers advance to conference finals with 93-80 defeat of Wizards

Wizards forward Trevor Ariza, left, looks to pass before Pacers forward Paul George can tie him up during a scramble for a loose ball in the second half of Game 6 on Thursday night in Washington.

Wizards forward Trevor Ariza, left, looks to pass before Pacers forward Paul George can tie him up during a scramble for a loose ball in the second half of Game 6 on Thursday night in Washington. (Alex Brandon / Associated Press)

Lance Stephenson finished with 17 points and eight assists for the Pacers, who earned Game 1 at home against the two-time defending NBA champions on Sunday. Indiana took Miami to seven games in the conference finals a year ago.

Marcin Gortat scored 19 points, and John Wall had 12 points and nine assists for the Wizards, who ended their best playoff run in decades. Washington won a playoff series for the first time since 2005 and a second-round game for the first time since 1982. But the team was ultimately undone by an inability to win at home, losing four out of five games at the Verizon Center while going 5-1 on the road in the playoffs.

The Wizards appeared to have a fix on the home-court demons when Bradley Beal stole a rebound from Roy Hibbert, then hit a three-pointer at the other end to put the Wizards up 74-73 with 8 1/2 minutes to play.

But that was Washington's only lead of the second half. West answered with a pair of jumpers, including a tough fade-away shot, and Stephenson added a layup to start a decisive 20-6 run that included three Wizards turnovers in four possessions. Washington went five minutes without a point and scored only two field goals after Beal's go-ahead three-pointer.

The Pacers were 46-13 on March 2 before limping to the finish line, barely holding on to the conference's No. 1 seeding. Things didn't look much better when Indiana was pushed to seven games in the first round by eighth-seeded Atlanta, or when the Pacers lost Game 1 at home to the Wizards.

But Hibbert revived himself in Game 2, the defense held the Wizards to 63 points in Game 3, and Paul George went off for 39 points in Game 4. The ugly Pacers returned in a 23-point beatdown at home in Game 5.

But they pulled ahead early in the clincher by shooting 59% in the first half and holding the up-tempo Wizards without a fast-break point until the second half.

The Wizards had to reschedule a Lady Gaga concert to host the game, upsetting the singer's fans and prompting an apology from team owner Ted Leonsis. Instead of Little Monsters in the arena, there were big ones — such as a 4 1/2-minute field goal drought in the second period that helped the Pacers to a 52-40 halftime lead.

Wall, who broke out of a shooting and leadership slump in Game 5, had moments that were more reckless than sublime in the first half. He was two for six from the field at the break, while Beal was three for 10. The Wizards made one of seven shots from three-point range, and only the inside presence of Nene and Gortat kept it close.

The Pacers got the lead to 16, but the Wizards answered with an 11-2 run capped by Wall's 1-on-3 transition layup, Washington's first fast-break basket. Wall was particularly assertive at the start of the fourth quarter, but the Pacers' defense held firm when it mattered.

There were 26 pitchers in baseball's 300-save club before Wednesday, an elite group headed by a right-hander who had the game's most devastating cut fastball (Mariano Rivera), another who had one of baseball's best changeups (Trevor Hoffman), and a left-hander who threw 98 mph (Billy Wagner).

A 5-2 win over Minnesota on Wednesday night proved costly for the Angels, who lost David Freese to a fractured right index finger, an injury that will sideline the third baseman for several weeks, and center fielder Daniel Robertson to right shoulder stiffness, an injury that is not serious.